
Bottled Citrus
Hugo Boss built its name on sharp tailoring, and Bottled Citrus feels like the fragrance equivalent of a crisp white shirt fresh out of the box. Released in 2025 as an Eau de Parfum, it takes the brand's signature Bottled DNA and pushes it toward brightness rather than woods. Aromatica carries the Bottled Citrus decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, so you can spend a week with it before deciding if it earns a spot in your rotation. It reads clean and citric from the first spray, built for men who want freshness with a bit of structure underneath, not a splash of lemon that fades in twenty minutes.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Lemon, Bergamot
Heart: Elemi, Bourbon Geranium
Base: Vetiver, Patchouli
The Scent
The first thing the nose registers is primofiore lemon, sharp and a little green, backed almost immediately by bergamot that softens the citrus into something rounder and less soapy. There is no slow build here. Within the first few minutes the top accord is already at full volume, bright and slightly bitter in a way that feels closer to peeling real fruit than to a cleaning product. As the citrus settles over the next twenty minutes, elemi resin starts to show through underneath it, bringing a warm, faintly honeyed quality that keeps the fragrance from staying one-dimensional. Bourbon geranium arrives around the same time, adding a green, slightly rosy edge that some noses read as aromatic and others read as almost minty, and both readings are fair since the note sits right on that line. This is the most interesting stretch of the wear, where citrus, resin, and geranium overlap and none of them fully wins. Into the second and third hour the base takes over, and vetiver pushes the fragrance toward drier, earthier territory. Patchouli joins it, not the dark, boozy patchouli of heavier orientals but a cleaner, woodier version that keeps the composition feeling fresh rather than heavy. By the dry-down the lemon has mostly retreated to a faint echo, and what remains is a vetiver-patchouli base with a whisper of that earlier geranium still hanging on. It never turns sweet and never turns particularly loud, which fits a fragrance built around restraint rather than a big finish.
When to Wear
This is a warm-weather fragrance first, suited to daytime office hours, client meetings, and travel days where you want to smell put-together without reaching for anything heavy. It also works well for spring and early summer weekend errands, from a coffee run to a lunch meeting, where the citrus-forward opening feels appropriate rather than overdressed. Anyone building out a work wardrobe of scents can browse the full Hugo Boss collection for something to pair with cooler months.
Who Is It For
Bottled Citrus suits someone who likes their fragrance the same way they like their shirts, pressed, simple, and unmistakably clean. It is a good match for a reader who found the original Bottled a touch too woody and wanted the same backbone with more citrus up front.
If you enjoy the original Bottled, it comes from the same house and shares that structured, tailored feel, with a warmer amber-wood base instead of this citrus lift. Browse the full Hugo Boss collection at Aromatica for the rest of the lineup.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.
Original: $353.00
-65%$353.00
$123.55Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Hugo Boss built its name on sharp tailoring, and Bottled Citrus feels like the fragrance equivalent of a crisp white shirt fresh out of the box. Released in 2025 as an Eau de Parfum, it takes the brand's signature Bottled DNA and pushes it toward brightness rather than woods. Aromatica carries the Bottled Citrus decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, so you can spend a week with it before deciding if it earns a spot in your rotation. It reads clean and citric from the first spray, built for men who want freshness with a bit of structure underneath, not a splash of lemon that fades in twenty minutes.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Lemon, Bergamot
Heart: Elemi, Bourbon Geranium
Base: Vetiver, Patchouli
The Scent
The first thing the nose registers is primofiore lemon, sharp and a little green, backed almost immediately by bergamot that softens the citrus into something rounder and less soapy. There is no slow build here. Within the first few minutes the top accord is already at full volume, bright and slightly bitter in a way that feels closer to peeling real fruit than to a cleaning product. As the citrus settles over the next twenty minutes, elemi resin starts to show through underneath it, bringing a warm, faintly honeyed quality that keeps the fragrance from staying one-dimensional. Bourbon geranium arrives around the same time, adding a green, slightly rosy edge that some noses read as aromatic and others read as almost minty, and both readings are fair since the note sits right on that line. This is the most interesting stretch of the wear, where citrus, resin, and geranium overlap and none of them fully wins. Into the second and third hour the base takes over, and vetiver pushes the fragrance toward drier, earthier territory. Patchouli joins it, not the dark, boozy patchouli of heavier orientals but a cleaner, woodier version that keeps the composition feeling fresh rather than heavy. By the dry-down the lemon has mostly retreated to a faint echo, and what remains is a vetiver-patchouli base with a whisper of that earlier geranium still hanging on. It never turns sweet and never turns particularly loud, which fits a fragrance built around restraint rather than a big finish.
When to Wear
This is a warm-weather fragrance first, suited to daytime office hours, client meetings, and travel days where you want to smell put-together without reaching for anything heavy. It also works well for spring and early summer weekend errands, from a coffee run to a lunch meeting, where the citrus-forward opening feels appropriate rather than overdressed. Anyone building out a work wardrobe of scents can browse the full Hugo Boss collection for something to pair with cooler months.
Who Is It For
Bottled Citrus suits someone who likes their fragrance the same way they like their shirts, pressed, simple, and unmistakably clean. It is a good match for a reader who found the original Bottled a touch too woody and wanted the same backbone with more citrus up front.
If you enjoy the original Bottled, it comes from the same house and shares that structured, tailored feel, with a warmer amber-wood base instead of this citrus lift. Browse the full Hugo Boss collection at Aromatica for the rest of the lineup.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.











